"But Stephanie's husband, Andrew, didn't want to give up the greenery and space their family had enjoyed for almost 30 years in their village about 20 miles north of the city. So the couple settled on a compromise: they'd sell their 100-year-old house in Edgemont, New York, and move to a more urban town in the county, preferably somewhere walkable to restaurants and the Hudson River or Long Island Sound."
"Around the same time, in the spring of 2024, the Falks were playing golf with their friends, Judy and Steven Cooperman, when they got to talking about their new home search. The Coopermans were in the same position, looking to sell the house they'd raised their kids in and find a more accessible, lower-maintenance home in a vibrant community. They were considering a new partially constructed, mixed-use development called Edge-on-Hudson in the riverside village of Sleepy Hollow."
"This piqued the Falks' interest. A few days later, Judy showed them around the area. The development checked many of both couples' boxes: a four-bedroom townhome would be big enough to host all of their kids and their partners comfortably, they'd be a stone's throw from the Hudson River and a walkable town, and they'd have an elevator in their home so that their aging parents could visit."
As Stephanie Falk's three children left for college, she considered moving closer to New York City but her husband wanted to keep suburban greenery. The couple compromised by selling their 100-year-old Edgemont home and seeking a more urban, walkable town in Westchester near restaurants and the Hudson or Long Island Sound. The Falks and their friends the Coopermans, also empty-nesters, explored Edge-on-Hudson in Sleepy Hollow in spring 2024. The mixed-use development offers four-bedroom townhomes with elevators, proximity to the river and town, shared amenities like a park and pool, and a dense layout intended to encourage neighborly socializing.
 Read at Business Insider
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